4.7 Review

Interaction between microplastic biofilm formation and antibiotics: Effect of microplastic biofilm and its driving mechanisms on antibiotic resistance gene

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 459, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.132099

Keywords

Microplastics; Antibiotics; Microplastics biofilm; Antibiotic resistance genes; Enrichment

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This paper comprehensively reviews the interaction between microplastics (MPs) and antibiotics (ATs), focusing on the role of biofilm developed MPs. It summarizes the formation process and unique microbial community structure of microplastic biofilm, and discusses the mechanisms by which microplastic biofilm drives the production and enrichment of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). The transfer pathways of ARGs affected by microplastic biofilm are outlined, with horizontal gene transfer (HGT) being the main mode of transmission. The ecological implications of the interaction between microplastic biofilm and ATs, as well as perspectives for future research, are also reviewed.
As two pollutants with similar transport pathways, microplastics (MPs) and antibiotics (ATs) inevitably co-exist in water environments, and their interaction has become a topic of intense research interest for scholars over the past few years. This paper comprehensively and systematically reviews the current interaction between MPs and ATs, in particular, the role played by biofilm developed MPs (microplastic biofilm). A summary of the formation process of microplastic biofilm and its unique microbial community structure is presented in the paper. The formation of microplastic biofilm can enhance the adsorption mechanisms of ATs on primary MPs. Moreover, microplastic biofilm system is a diverse and vast reservoir of genetic material, and this paper reviews the mechanisms by which microplastics with biofilm drive the production of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and the processes that selectively enrich for more ARGs. Meanwhile, the enrichment of ARGs may lead to the development of microbial resistance and the gradual loss of the antimicrobial effect of ATs. The transfer pathways of ARGs affected by microplastic biofilm are outlined, and ARGs dependent transfer of antibiotic resistance bacteria (ARB) is mainly through horizontal gene transfer (HGT). Furthermore, the ecological implications of the interaction between microplastic biofilm and ATs and perspectives for future research are reviewed. This review contributes to a new insight into the aquatic ecological environmental risks and the fate of contaminants (MPs, ATs), and is of great significance for controlling the combined pollution of these two pollutants.

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